The present bumper impact beam includes pultruding polymer (e.g. thermoset polymer, preferably polyurethane) into continuous reinforcement (preferably carbon fibers or glass fibers), the reinforcement including fabrics selectively positioned and extending around corners for improved impact strength. The beam preferably has a 50%-70% fiber volume fraction that is relatively uniform throughout the part. A curved cooling support and/or beam design may be used to cause the cooled beam to have a sweep.
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13. A bumper impact beam comprising:
a beam made of polymeric material and reinforcement and including walls defining a cross section having a width (w) and height (H);
the reinforcement includes at least one first fabric having a first width greater than w but less than H, and at least one second fabric having a second width about equal to H.
31. A bumper impact beam comprising:
a beam made of polymeric material and elongated reinforcement extending a length of the beam, the beam when in a vehicle-mounted position including front, rear, top, and bottom walls forming a closed section with corners, and at least one internal wall extending between the front and rear walls;
the reinforcement including at least one fabric in each wall that extends a full width of each wall and that extends partially onto an adjacent one of the walls.
20. A bumper impact beam, comprising:
a beam made of polymeric material and reinforcement and, when in a vehicle-mounted position, including front, rear, top and bottom walls defining a cross section having a width (w) and height (H);
the reinforcement including at least one fabric that extends fully across the front wall and onto the to and bottom walls; and
wherein the beam includes an intermediate wall extending between the front and rear walls and that is located between the top and bottom walls, and wherein the reinforcement includes at least a second fabric that extends fully across the intermediate wall partially onto at least one of the front and rear walls.
35. A bumper impact beam, comprising:
a beam made of polymeric material and reinforcement and, when in a vehicle-mounted position, including front, rear, top and bottom walls defining a tubular cross section having a width (w) and height (H);
the reinforcement including at least one fabric that extends fully across one of the front and rear walls and onto the top and bottom walls; and
wherein the beam includes an intermediate wall extending between the front and rear walls and that is located between the top and bottom walls, and wherein the reinforcement includes at least a second fabric that extends fully across the intermediate wall partially onto at least one of the front and rear walls.
36. A bumper impact beam, comprising:
a beam made of polymeric material and reinforcement and, when in a vehicle-mounted position, including front, rear, top and bottom walls defining a tubular cross section having a width (w) and height (H);
the reinforcement including at least one fabric that extends fully across one of the front and rear walls and onto the top and bottom walls; and
wherein the at least one fabric includes a first fabric of first fiber material that extends across one of the front and rear walls and onto the top and bottom walls and includes at least one second fabric, the first and second fabrics including overlapping edge portions on the top wall and also on the bottom wall.
23. A bumper impact beam, comprising:
a beam made of polymeric material and reinforcement and, when in a vehicle-mounted position, including front, rear, top and bottom walls defining a cross section having a width (w) and height (H);
the reinforcement including at least one fabric that extends fully across the front wall and onto the top and bottom walls; and
wherein the reinforcement includes a first fabric of first fiber material that extends across the front wall and onto the top and bottom walls, and includes a second fabric of second fiber material that extends across the rear wall and onto the top and bottom walls, the first and second fabrics including overlapping portions on the top wall and also on the bottom wall.
1. A vehicle bumper system comprising:
an impact beam including polymeric material and at least 30% by volume of longitudinally-extending continuous fiber reinforcement embedded in the polymeric material, with at least some of the reinforcement extending a length of the beam; and
attachment structure on ends of the beam for mounting the beam to a vehicle's frame rails;
wherein the reinforcement includes fabric consisting of a sheet selected from at least one of: woven fabric, stitched fabric, tailored fabric with stitched patterns therein, braided fabrics, and multi-material hybrid fabrics; and
wherein the fabric includes discontinuous sections strategically placed along and around corners defined by the beam to control crack propagation along the corners upon impact.
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This application claims benefit under 35 USC section 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/090,524 entitled PULTRUDED BEAM, AND APPARATUS AND METHODS FOR MANUFACTURING, filed Dec. 11, 2014, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to impact beams made of pultruded reinforced polymeric material, and more particularly relates to a pultruded beam having a significant percentage of long continuous fiber reinforcement and that is optimized for impact, adapting it for use as vehicle bumper impact beams. The present invention also relates to apparatus and methods for making same. However, the present invention is not believed to be limited to only bumper impact beams, but instead is believed to extend to other impact beams and other products where properties are important such as bending strength, tensile strength, impact strength, strength to weight ratio, and/or attachment.
Modern vehicles include bumper beams designed for impact strength, but are also designed for designed low weight, high strength to weight ratio, front end aesthetics, optimal energy absorption, occupant safety, pedestrian injury reduction, flexible design in styling, and many other factors. Notably, weight significantly affects vehicle mileage, especially given a bumper beam's size and its position in front of the vehicle tires. Original equipment manufacturers (i.e. vehicle “OEMs”) continue to desire a next level in performance improvement and cost/mass optimization. For example, some vehicle OEMs have specified bumper beams made by aluminum extrusion, doing so despite a cost penalty for material, despite a loss of some material strength properties, and despite functional and physical limitations of aluminum extruding processes and extruded components.
Pultruded components incorporate a high density of very-long or continuous reinforcement fibers in a polymeric part, such as 40-50% reinforcement or more. However, known pultruding processes and pultruded polymeric parts have not been accepted by OEMs for making bumper impact beams for several reasons. For example, pultruded materials can exhibit unacceptable characteristics on impact, such as premature catastrophic failure, (e.g. failure by fast-propagating longitudinally-extending cracks along lines defined by reinforcement fibers and polymeric material flow lines), low total energy absorption and low maximum energy absorption prior fracture, and generally unacceptable force-deflection profiles. Also, it is noted that pultrusion processes tend to be relatively slow, parts can be process sensitive, and the processes are not generally widely known nor widely used. Also, pultruded components require careful secondary treatment with care being necessary to avoid significant loss of properties due to breaking of imbedded fibers and/or creation of stress-risers when creating beam attachment sites. Also, distribution of fibers and their exact location and orientation can be difficult to control. Also, it is difficult to sweep (i.e. longitudinally curve) an elongated pultruded part. Still further, impact properties at corners and at other locations of “natural” stress risers can be problematic.
In one aspect of the present invention, a vehicle bumper system comprises an impact beam including polymeric material and at least 30% by volume of longitudinally-extending continuous fiber reinforcement embedded in the polymeric material, with at least some of the reinforcement extending a length of the beam; and attachment structure on ends of the beam for mounting the beam to a vehicle's frame rails.
In another aspect of the present invention, a beam adapted for impact comprises an elongated impact beam including at least 40% polymeric material and at least 40% continuous reinforcement extending a length of the beam, the beam including walls defining a closed section; and attachment structure on ends of the beam for mounting the beam to a vehicle's frame.
In another aspect of the present invention, a bumper impact beam comprises a beam including at least polymeric material and at least 40% reinforcement; the reinforcement including tows, rovings and fabrics of fibers, the beam including a cross section with walls defining a corner, with at least one of the fabrics extending around the corner.
In another aspect of the present invention, a bumper impact beam comprises a beam made of polymeric material and reinforcement and including walls defining a cross section having a width (W) and height (H); the reinforcement includes at least one first fabric having a first width greater than W but less than H, and at least one second fabric having a second width about equal to H.
In another aspect of the present invention, a bumper impact beam comprises a beam made of polymeric material and reinforcement and, when in a vehicle-mounted position, including front, rear, top and bottom walls defining a cross section having a width (W) and height (H); the reinforcement including at least one fabric that extends fully across the front wall and onto the top and bottom walls.
In another aspect of the present invention, a bumper impact beam comprises a beam made of polymeric material and elongated reinforcement extending a length of the beam, the beam when in a vehicle-mounted position including front, rear, top, and bottom walls forming a closed section with corners, and at least one internal wall extending between the front and rear walls; the reinforcement including at least one fabric in each wall that extends a full width of each wall and that extends partially onto an adjacent one of the walls.
In another aspect of the present invention, a process comprises pultruding a continuous beam by pulling reinforcement through a pultrusion die while injecting pultrusion polymer into the die, the reinforcement including at least some fabrics extending around corners formed by joined walls in the beam; cutting the continuous beam into bumper impact beams having a length sufficient to extend across a vehicle between vehicle frame rails; and forming attachment structure on ends of the beam including a pattern of holes for receiving bumper attachment fasteners.
In another aspect of the present invention, a process comprises steps of: pultruding a continuous bumper impact beam including injecting a polymer into elongated reinforcement made from continuous fibers, the beam being elongated along a longitudinal direction; and forming the beam to a non-linear shape prior to the polymer setting up into a permanent set shape.
These and other aspects, objects, and features of the present invention will be understood and appreciated by those skilled in the art upon studying the following specification, claims, and appended drawings.
The present bumper impact beam 50 (
As used herein, the word “reinforcement” is intended to broadly include length-extending reinforcing fibers of all types, such as individual fibers, twisted bundles, fabrics, tows, rovings, and/or other arrangements. The word “fabric” includes fibers stitched or woven or otherwise secured together to form a “sheet” or mat of fibers. It is noted that the fiber volume fraction (FVF) can be varied at different locations within a pultruded part for optimal performance, such as by placing more or less fibers at and/or extending around corners and along walls where more (or less) stress may occur or where there stress needs to be well distributed. The reinforcements are pre-positioned by a guide as they enter an injection die (also called “pultrusion die”), thus placing them at strategic locations in the pultruded beam 50, as discussed below.
The beam 50 (
As noted above, the term “reinforcement” broadly includes a number of different reinforcement and fiber types and arrangements, such as fiber tows/rovings, braided fibers, fiber fabrics (including woven-flat, woven-3D, fabric with core, tailored fabric, stitched fabric, hybrid fabric with unique arrangement or combination of fiber fabrics), and other fiber arrangements (such as intermittently placed fabric sections placed along and/or in the beam to optimize impact properties). To optimize corner strength and impact properties, the illustrated beam 50 includes at least one roving where the fibers extend primarily longitudinally and continuously a length of the beam 50 and at least one fabric that extends around a corner in the beam's cross section. Also, a preferred beam 50 includes at least one fabric where the fibers include angled fibers extending at 45 degrees (or other degrees) and/or with bi-axially extending fibers, which assists with stress distribution on impact.
The illustrated pultruded bumper impact beam 50 (
The beam 50 (
In a preferred form, the beam with reinforcements (
In one form, the present innovative beam (
Similarly, in another most preferred form, the beam 50 (
The pultrusion processes (apparatus 149) (
In a preferred form, the present pultruded beam is made of about 50% (or less) thermoset polyurethane polymeric material, and about 50% (or more) continuous carbon-fiber bundled fabrics/fibers 70-90, and provides a fiber volume fraction (FVF) of about 50%-70% at least in strategic locations for optimal beam strength. This FVF provides sufficient polymeric material to bind the fibers for optimal strength, while maintaining an optimally high percentage of fibers. As illustrated by the F-D graph in
As noted above, it is contemplated that different polymeric and reinforcement fibers can be used depending on a particular beam's functional design requirements. For example, it is contemplated that other fibers can be used instead of carbon fibers, such as aramid, basalt, or glass fibers. Also, there are different grades and diametrical sizes of fibers (carbon and others). Also, different woven mats and different mat locations will produce different beam properties. It is contemplated that many different thermoset (or thermoplastic) materials can be use besides polyurethane. The present polyurethane is a two-part fast-curing polymer that will cure to a self-holding shape in about 5-30 seconds, though slower curing polymers can be used for optimization of the pultrusion process, such as if the pultrusion process is slowed for control reasons. It is contemplated that the reinforcement can include different types of materials, such as glass fibers in one location and carbon fibers in other (or similar) locations.
Notably, the present beam incorporates fabrics having fibers woven to extend at angles to a longitudinal direction. For example, fabrics can have fibers extending at an angle to a longitudinal direction, such as at 45 or 90 degrees. This provides significant strength and stress distribution by providing a structural mechanism for handling non-longitudinal stress and loads often encountered by bumper impact beams. For example, the angled fibers provide improved beam strength, and also reduce a speed and tendency of longitudinal crack propagation upon failure. Also, where fabrics and/or angled fibers extend across corners and joined walls, the angled fibers transmit stress away from the corners and joined walls. Also, fabrics can be used in high-stress areas having fibers that are better adapted for the expected stress at that location, such as at attachment sites. Also, particularly woven and bundle combinations and stitches can be selectively positioned in the pultrusion. By selectively using fabrics, additional strength and localized region-specific load resistance can be provided in selected areas of a beam. Concurrently, areas of lower stress can be “adjusted” to minimize cost and weight, while optimizing overall the pultrusion process.
The present pultruded beam 50 (
In
A comparison of the FD lines (
It is contemplated that a design of the beam can “help” the process for incorporating a sweep into a pultruded beam. For example, beam walls and reinforcements may be designed to cause a sweep as the polymeric material cures, cools, and shrinks. For example, if a front wall of a beam is thicker than a rear wall, the thicker front wall will cool at a different rate and dimensionally shrink a different amount, potentially causing a natural sweep in the beam to occur during final cure and set up of the polymeric material. The reinforcement density and reinforcing fabrics can be varied between different walls to also cause a different dimensional shrink. As illustrated, the downstream sweeping process includes, in significant part, supporting the beam 50′ as it naturally curves as the polymer cures and cools. For example, the downstream sweeping mechanism can include a curved portion of the cooling table that is specifically shaped to support the beam as it cools and cures to reach a desired curvature. Also, the pulling mechanism can press the beam 50′ against the table during the final cure and cooling process, thus providing more consistent dimensional accuracy to the sweep of the beam 50′. Final curvature of a beam can also be affected by controlling the temperature decline on different sides of the pultruded beam. Thus several things can be done to impart a desired sweep into the beam 50′.
It is to be understood that variations and modifications can be made on the aforementioned structure without departing from the concepts of the present invention, and further it is to be understood that such concepts are intended to be covered by the following claims unless these claims by their language expressly state otherwise.
Matecki, Joseph R., Corwin, Cort C., Jacobson, Toby K., Pendergrass, Ed C.
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Nov 25 2015 | MATECKI, JOSEPH R | SHAPE CORP | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 037186 | /0946 | |
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